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April - June 2026

When Worshipped and Worshipper are One by Jug Suraiya

The state of enlightenment that sages attain is that of ultimate tranquillity. But as many accounts attest, the ascent to the transcendence called Moksh, or Satori, or best of all that which remains without name or definition, can be an earth-shattering experience, as electrifying as a thunderbolt striking not from the blue but from within.

One of the most harrowing of such narrations is that of Ramkrishna Paramhansa, a mystic whose polestar of guidance in his quest for liberation was the Goddess Kali, although he was a disciple of Adi Shankaracharya’s Advaita, the teaching that the individual atman is non-different (a-dvaita) from the cosmic reality symbolised by Brahman.

The liberation from the labyrinthine illusion of separateness lies in the path of Jnana, knowledge, which embodies all routes of spiritual realisation without the barriers or boundaries of distinction and discrimination.

The Introduction to The Gospel of Shri Ramakrishna, translated from Bengali into English in 1943 by Swami Nikhilananda, describes the sage’s release from the bondage of sensory limitation in devastating detail:

“I had no difficulty in taking my mind from all the objects of the world. But the radiant, and all too familiar figure of the Blissful Mother… appeared before me as a living reality…prevented me from passing into the Great Beyond. Again and again, I tried, but She stood in my way every time…

“…I again sat to meditate. As soon as the Divine Mother appeared before me, I used my discrimination as a sword, and with it clove Her in two. The last barrier fell… I lost myself in samadhi.”

Ramakrishna cut the bonds of attachment, however sublime, that create the illusion of discrimination, of separateness, from the inescapable unity of all being.

In doing this he went beyond even the core of Advaita as summed up in the Upanishadic Great Saying, ‘Tat Twam Asi’, That Thou Art, Tat being Brahman, Twam the individual soul, and Asi establishing correlation between the two. The phrase is a mnemonic connecting the individual with Brahman.

The verbal linkage between the two, creates the snare of the sensory world to act as go-between, an interloper in the inseparable. The true devotee must sunder from the devoted by annihilating the separation between worshipper and worshipped in all-embracing Brahman.

Beyond the sacred there are no destinations. Not even that mofussil way-station called Heaven.

(Source: The Speaking Tree, Times of India, 23rd Feb 2026)